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By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Explain a scenario where the magnetic and electric fields are crossed and their forces balance each other as a charged particle moves through a velocity selector
  • Compare how charge carriers move in a conductive material and explain how this relates to the Hall effect

In 1879, E.H. Hall devised an experiment that can be used to identify the sign of the predominant charge carriers in a conducting material. From a historical perspective, this experiment was the first to demonstrate that the charge carriers in most metals are negative.

Visit this website to find more information about the Hall effect.

We investigate the Hall effect    by studying the motion of the free electrons along a metallic strip of width l in a constant magnetic field ( [link] ). The electrons are moving from left to right, so the magnetic force they experience pushes them to the bottom edge of the strip. This leaves an excess of positive charge at the top edge of the strip, resulting in an electric field E directed from top to bottom. The charge concentration at both edges builds up until the electric force on the electrons in one direction is balanced by the magnetic force on them in the opposite direction. Equilibrium is reached when:

e E = e v d B

where e is the magnitude of the electron charge, v d is the drift speed of the electrons, and E is the magnitude of the electric field created by the separated charge. Solving this for the drift speed results in

v d = E B .
An illustration of the Hall effect: In both figures, the current in the strip is to the left and the magnetic field points into the page. In figure a, a negative charge is moving to the right with velocity v d. Positive charges accumulate at the top of the strip, negative charges at the bottom of the strip. An electric field E sub H points down. The moving charge experiences an upward force e E sub H and a downward force e v sub d B. In figure b, a positive charge is moving to the left with velocity v d. Negative charges accumulate at the top of the strip, positive charges at the bottom of the strip. An electric field E sub H points up. The moving charge experiences an upward force e E sub H and a downward force e v sub d B.
In the Hall effect, a potential difference between the top and bottom edges of the metal strip is produced when moving charge carriers are deflected by the magnetic field. (a) Hall effect for negative charge carriers; (b) Hall effect for positive charge carriers.

A scenario where the electric and magnetic fields are perpendicular to one another is called a crossed-field situation. If these fields produce equal and opposite forces on a charged particle with the velocity that equates the forces, these particles are able to pass through an apparatus, called a velocity selector    , undeflected. This velocity is represented in [link] . Any other velocity of a charged particle sent into the same fields would be deflected by the magnetic force or electric force.

Going back to the Hall effect, if the current in the strip is I , then from Current and Resistance , we know that

I = n e v d A

where n is the number of charge carriers per volume and A is the cross-sectional area of the strip. Combining the equations for v d and I results in

I = n e ( E B ) A .

The field E is related to the potential difference V between the edges of the strip by

E = V l .

The quantity V is called the Hall potential and can be measured with a voltmeter. Finally, combining the equations for I and E gives us

V = I B l n e A

where the upper edge of the strip in [link] is positive with respect to the lower edge.

We can also combine [link] and [link] to get an expression for the Hall voltage in terms of the magnetic field:

V = B l v d .

What if the charge carriers are positive, as in [link] ? For the same current I , the magnitude of V is still given by [link] . However, the upper edge is now negative with respect to the lower edge. Therefore, by simply measuring the sign of V , we can determine the sign of the majority charge carriers in a metal.

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Oct 06, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12074/1.3
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